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  • - Technology allows a scale and speed of opinion creation

  • that is extremely seductive to our brain.

  • Social media has thrust us all onto the head of a pin,

  • socially speaking, existentially speaking.

  • - We all exist in this world where we can tweet at somebody

  • Even if they're on the other side of the planet,

  • even if they have a lot more money than we do,

  • We can still compete with them on engagement.

  • We're pulled in so many directions between the texts alerts

  • and the constantly scrolling feeds.

  • And if we're distracted, we can't pay attention.

  • If I can't pay attention, I can't make new memories.

  • Every time you go online, you are in a funhouse of mirrors.

  • Have you ever seen a news story about a data breach for a website you use?

  • When that happens, someone anywhere in the world can access

  • that information for a couple of cents on the dark web.

  • If you don't change your passwords or secure your information in time,

  • you might start seeing strange transactions appear on your credit

  • or debit statements.

  • In some cases, you could get locked out of your social media accounts.

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  • Now let's get back to the discussion of the impacts of social media.

  • I'm Luke Burgis, founder of Fourth Wall Ventures,

  • professor of business,

  • and author of the book

  • "Wanting: The Power of Mimetic Desire in Everyday Life."

  • - We all exist in this world where we can tweet at somebody

  • or engage with somebody,

  • could even be the President of the United States.

  • And they might react to us back.

  • Social media has thrust us all onto the head of a pin,

  • socially speaking, existentially speaking.

  • Even if they're on the other side of the planet,

  • even if they have a lot more money than we do,

  • we can still interact with them.

  • We can still compete with them on engagement.

  • They're inside of our world.

  • We have a mimetic machine in our pocket

  • where all of these people exist.

  • So, what is mimetic desire?

  • Mimetic desire means that we're adopting

  • another person's desire as our own,

  • usually without even realizing that we're doing it.

  • So, social media has given us millions of mimetic models

  • that we now have to contend with.

  • Some people have went from having 10 mimetic models

  • to now having a million,

  • and we haven't quite come to grips as a culture

  • with what that means for our mental and emotional health.

  • There are two kinds of mimetic models.

  • The first kind is called an external mediator of desire.

  • These are models that are outside of our world;

  • whether because they exist in a different social sphere

  • than we do,

  • there's no possibility of us coming into contact with them

  • and certainly not becoming rivals with them.

  • They're in some sense, outside of our world of desire,

  • outside of our world of competition.

  • Now, these external models of desire

  • can be real, or they can be fictional.

  • The other kind of model is inside of our world

  • called internal mediators of desire.

  • These are people that we do come into contact with,

  • and there is a possibility of conflict

  • or rivalry with these people.

  • These are people that are in our family;

  • these are people in our workplace;

  • these are people that could even be our friends.

  • It's easier to compare ourselves to them.

  • These are the kinds of people that we look to as benchmarks,

  • and we're far more likely to be envious

  • of somebody that we went to high school with

  • who now has a great job and a beautiful spouse,

  • than we are to be envious

  • of the richest person in the world.

  • The danger with external mediators of desire,

  • with keeping up with people that are very successful,

  • with people that have modeled a certain kind of lifestyle,

  • is that there's no end to that process.

  • All desire is a form of transcendence.

  • We desire to go beyond the boundaries,

  • to go just over the mountain,

  • to be the kind of person

  • that we don't feel that we currently are.

  • Having positive models of desire to emulate

  • is a very good thing.

  • It's important to have people that model virtues

  • and goodness that we would like,

  • but we have to understand the limitations of any model.

  • And understanding how the dynamic

  • between us and our models changes in that scenario

  • is really, really important.

  • It's also important to understand

  • when somebody is an internal model of desire to us

  • because, in that case, we have to have boundaries.

  • All desire comes from us feeling like we lack something,

  • and that can bring us into a dangerous, vicious cycle

  • because there will always be another model to find.

  • We have to choose our models wisely.

  • We also have to know when the model

  • is inflaming us with the desire

  • for something that's gonna bring real fulfillment

  • or whether it's going to bring a dopamine hit

  • or allow us to fantasize about a life

  • that we'll probably never have.

  • And even if we did have,

  • it would probably make us miserable.

  • All you need to do is go on Instagram

  • and spend five minutes,

  • and you see lifestyle's model,

  • you see vacation destination's model, fashions,

  • manners of speech, ways of engagement,

  • ways of speaking, political preferences.

  • All of these desires are modeled for us 24 hours a day,

  • billions of them, and we need to understand

  • the mimetic landscape of social media

  • or else we'll become totally controlled by it.

  • The greatest strength of social media

  • is its 'democratizing tendency.'

  • We don't have to just look to elites

  • and a few news outlets to tell us about us.

  • We can actually communicate with each other.

  • But when we engage online, we tend to think

  • that we're interacting with a reasonable sample

  • of the actual population, but it's not true.

  • Close to 80% of all content on social media

  • is generated by about 10% of the users.

  • That 10% tends to be extreme on most social issues.

  • They are the vocal fringe.

  • When you have a vocal minority

  • that is perceived as the majority,

  • critical mass of us will actually either self-silence,

  • or we will actually go along to get along,

  • and it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

  • This is how collective illusions form.

  • It's not terribly surprising that some of the first people

  • to start to use these tools to manipulate

  • were leaders who need consensus to conserve power.

  • - Venezuela. (speaks Spanish)

  • - An example of this is Nicolás Maduro,

  • the leader of Venezuela.

  • For a long time, it looked like, on social media,

  • that he had a pretty good beat

  • on the consensus of the people that he led.

  • So, almost everything that he would say,

  • stories that were written about him that were positive,

  • would be retweeted and shared,

  • and it looked like this represented some kind of consensus,

  • but it turned out a significant percentage

  • of his so-called "followers"

  • were actually what we call 'social bots.'

  • These are fake accounts that only exist

  • to retweet anything positive about him or that he said,

  • and, importantly, to attack the opposition.

  • When Twitter banned them,

  • the real consensus was with the opposition,

  • and that started to emerge and be retweeted

  • as more and more people recognized

  • that it was okay to say what they actually thought.

  • Social media is a free-for-all

  • in terms of who can shout the loudest,

  • and who can silence other people

  • in the name of masquerading as a majority

  • and manufacturing collective illusions.

  • Your willingness to conform

  • and your unwillingness to challenge

  • what you think the group believes

  • will actually contribute to leading the group astray.

  • The solution to our online life

  • is to get offline once in a while.

  • The most important thing you can do

  • is continue to have conversations with your family,

  • with your neighbors, with your community.

  • Don't carry that distortion over

  • into the way you treat people in real life.

  • My name is Amishi Jha. I'm a neuroscientist and professor

  • at the University of Miami,

  • and the author of the book "Peak Mind:

  • Find Your Focus, Own Your Attention,

  • Invest 12 Minutes a Day."

  • - Where is your attention right now?

  • The human brain's attention system

  • is actually the success story

  • of what makes us unique as human beings.

  • Because attention fuels our ability to think,

  • to feel, and connect,

  • what we pay attention to is our life.

  • For a long time, through our evolutionary history,

  • the brain started to suffer from a very big problem

  • which is that there's far more information

  • out in the environment than could be fully processed.

  • Attention ended up becoming a very useful solution

  • because it allows us to prioritize information,

  • but there are qualities of the human experience

  • that disable attention.

  • Given how powerful attention is, we need to really respect

  • where we place this precious brain resource.

  • The mind is no different than the body.

  • The mind needs to be exercised daily

  • to optimize our psychological well-being.

  • Knowing this, I became very interested in understanding

  • if we might be able to train attention.

  • The brain's attention system is incredibly powerful.

  • There's three big ways we use attention as a fuel

  • for having success in our daily activities.

  • We use our attention to actually 'Think'-

  • during thinking there's an idea that comes to mind,

  • and then we hyperlink it to other ideas.

  • That's what thought actually is,

  • and the glue between those hyperlinks is attention.

  • But it's not only used for the purposes

  • of what we might call cognitive functioning,

  • we also use our attention to 'Feel.'

  • Think about the last time you actually had a joyful moment

  • in your lives.

  • If you weren't paying attention to it,

  • chances are you missed it.

  • You didn't get the benefit

  • of the positive emotional response.

  • Finally, the third area

  • is 'Connecting'-

  • our social interactions with other people.

  • Without devoting attention, we don't experience care

  • and we can't extend care.

  • In fact, you might say that paying attention

  • to another person is our highest form of love.

  • But while attention is so incredibly powerful,

  • it's fragile and vulnerable.

  • The three biggies that we've learned about in my labs are:

  • Stress

  • Threat

  • or Negative Mood.

  • Maybe you could even say they're like kryptonite

  • for attention.

  • But we all know you can't live a life

  • without experiencing stress, threat, or negative mood.

  • A lot of our work with high-performing groups describe

  • this feeling of not having full access to their attention

  • when they need it most.

  • So what are those circumstances?

  • There's a shorthand that we can use to think about this.

  • The term is VUCA:

  • Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, Ambiguous.

  • The world today feels like it's a constant VUCA environment,

  • but there's another challenge that our attention faces,

  • and why many of us feel like we're in an attentional crisis.

  • Frankly, the brain was designed to be lured by,

  • for our evolutionary success and survival,

  • certain kinds of information; threatening information

  • novel information, self-related information,

  • and even things that are fun and enticing.

  • I'm talking about the 'Attention Economy.'

  • Everything is being done by teams of engineers

  • to actually capture your attention and keep it there;

  • your attention is the product.

  • Finally, the mind can be hijacked away by something

  • called 'Mental Time Travel.'

  • That means that our attention is not in the present moment,

  • so when we're thinking about the past,

  • our attention is fully in the past,

  • same thing with the future.

  • About 50% of our waking moments,

  • we aren't in the present moment.

  • Now, that may seem very disempowering,

  • like, 'How are we ever gonna fight that fight?'

  • But, the good news is that decades of research in my own lab

  • and many others has now given us a solution-

  • mindfulness training, something that's been around

  • for millennia.

  • We can train our brain so that we do not need to fight.

  • What we know

  • is that when people practice mindfulness meditation,

  • which is attending to the present moment,

  • their attention is stronger.

  • 12 minutes or more a day can cultivate

  • something called 'Meta-Awareness.'

  • What is Meta-Awareness?

  • It's the ability to be aware of the contents and processes

  • of what's going on in our mind moment by moment.

  • We're paying attention to our attention.

  • Now, why would that awareness be beneficial?

  • Because every time we are aware, we have more control.

  • We can own our attention, and we have it available to us

  • to not only enjoy the moments of our lives

  • and feel fulfillment,

  • but to meet the challenges and demands

  • that we certainly will all face.

  • Minds wander; it's a natural thing that the brain does.

  • When our mind moves away, gently return it back-

  • simply begin again.

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- Technology allows a scale and speed of opinion creation

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